Broadleaf Plantain: Food & Medicine Beneath Your Feet

Broadleaf plantain is a common weed that many people tend to easily recognize yet there is nothing common about this plant. It is a good source of nutrition as well as a multitude of health benefits.
Plantain (pronounced plan-tin) is a perennial leafy plant in the Plantaginaceae family that often behaves as an annual or biennial plant. Interestingly it has a cousin named the narrow leaf plantain (or ribwort) that shares almost the same nutrients and medicinal factors. Broadleaf plantain’s botanical name is Plantago major and the narrow leaf plantain is Plantago lanceolate. There are other plantains but they are not as commonly widespread as these two varieties.

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Broadleaf plantain was used as food about 4,000 year ago in Europe and there is some indication that this plant was cultivated. As people left Europe to explore and settle in what is now North America, they took many seeds with them (including plantain) so that they could continue using the food and medicine they were accustomed to. Some records indicate that various Native people called this plant “The footstep of the white,” because it ultimately ended up growing in areas where the Europeans had been.

For centuries plantain was well-recognized as a medicinal plant. In the late 1500’s Shakespeare made mention of this amazing plant in “Romeo and Juliet.” In Act I, Scene II he wrote:

BENVOLIO
Tut, man, one fire burns out another’s burning,
One pain is lessen’d by another’s anguish;
Turn giddy, and be holp by backward turning;
One desperate grief cures with another’s languish:
Take thou some new infection to thy eye,
And the rank poison of the old will die.

Young leaves can be eaten raw but as they get older they tend to become bitter and quite tedious to prepare because the fibrous strands are best removed before use. Some people blanch the leaves in boiling water before using them in salads in order to make them tender.

Plantain can be used to make a tea and use this tea to prepare rice, quinoa or couscous.

Plantain as Herbal Medicine

Plantain is best recognized as the plant that you make a poultice using your teeth and apply it to a fresh cut to stop infection and stop bleeding. There is a truly a plethora of health benefits when using plantain as herbal medicine.

This plant is apparently the best in the field of blood poisoning treatment. Michael Tierra, L.Ac., O.M.D. (one of the forerunners of the North American Natural Health movement) states that plantain is an herb that will “dry excess moisture and remove excess fat where toxins are retained.”

Plantain is an alterative meaning it cleans and corrects impure conditions in the blood. It is also a diuretic so it is useful for bladder and kidney problems and it helps reduce water retention.

Susan Weed, director of the Wise Woman Center in New York has always praised plantain for its virtues. It stops itching from insects, stinging nettle, and it can help to draw out poisons from snake bites. (Although keep in mind it is imperative to seek medical help if you have been bitten by a poisonous snake.) Plantain has also been known to help alleviate the pain of poison ivy.

Those with skin disorders have found relief by using plantain; in fact, some herbalists rate plantain over aloe and other herbs when it comes to treating skin problems. Dr. James A. Duke wrote in his incredible book “The Green Pharmacy” that plantain tea (or juice) is a popular folk remedy for treating burns.

Plantain roots can be powdered and used on toothaches. Using a fresh root by chewing it can bring relief.

Russian scientists have discovered that plantain and its cousin psyllium are both useful for weight loss. According to Herbal Legacy, “Those taking 3 grams of plantain with water 30 minutes before eating lost more weight than women not using this herb. Plantain contains mucilage which acts as an appetite suppressant while reducing the intestinal absorption of fat and bile. It also lowers LDL cholesterol and the triglyceride levels in blood. Plantain usually lowers blood sugar.”

Finally, the seeds can be used on a salad or stored as herbal medicine. The seeds are nature’s “Metamucil”.

Identifying Plantain

Broadleaf plantain has green, oval to egg-shaped leaves that grow in a rosette. These leaves have thick stems that meet at a base. When these stems are broken, they reveal string-like veins that resemble those in celery. Long-pointed, green, petite flowers grow from the base; these also contain a small pod housing dark seeds.

The leaves grow in a rosette and can range from 3” to 10” in length. Plantain leaves have stems that contain string-like veins and these veins are seen on the leaf. There are five to seven prominent parallel veins from the base. Leaves are generally broadly lance-shaped to egg-shaped, are hairless or sparsely short haired.

Plantain is found in almost every state and province throughout the U.S. and Canada. It has even been found growing at the altitude of 7,200’ in California. Like many weeds it inhabits disturbed areas such as agricultural land, pathways, lawns, gardens, and parkland. It prefers well-drained soils that are neutral or alkaline and does not like heavily shaded areas.

About Mom Prepares

Mom Prepares is an essential oils and natural living blog. We bridge the gap between scientific research and the everyday essential oils user. If you're new to essential oils, you can download our free eBook: The Beginner's Guide to Essential Oils.

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I’m a person who has had some knowledge handed down but most I’ve read and read and digested myself. I used plantain on a spider bite and within 12 hours the redness , swelling ,itch and complaining was gone and in fact I never heard another word from him afterwards about the bite. Great plant. I’m going to try it on a very common skin condition . If it works maybe I can get myself out of the poorhouse . ✝